www.TintUp.com/ is a simple tool that lets you aggregate, curate, and beautifully display any social media feeds (including hashtags) from multiple networks onto your website, mobile app, Facebook Page, or event display. We help you create dynamic social hubs on your digital properties.
We want to make publishing simple.Percolate is a platform that helps you create content by bubbling up interesting stuff for you to comment on. We believe people are interesting and want to make tools to help you express yourself easily. Percolate works by hooking up to streams of content (like RSS and Twitter, with more to come) and filtering down to the most interesting stuff for you (by way of a lot of math and technical wizardry). We then present that content back to you for you to react to, which is as easy as hitting an "awesome" button.
the Windows Twitter client you'll love to use. Frenzy uses Dropbox to store your feed items and keep everything in sync. You don't need another account and there's no other server involved.
Eddy is a media aggregation platform built for the public display of up-to-the-minute activity on realtime services like Twitter. It offers three primary features: rapid collection and curation of what people are saying about an event, moderation of acceptable material, and speedy, reliable republishing of these conversational streams. Setup of the application is fast and easy, and made specifically for use by interactive media designers.
Miso is a social TV platform that makes watching TV more fun. The Miso team is located in San Francisco at 580 Howard Street in the SOMA neighborhood of San Francisco. If you want to reach out to us with any questions, feedback or partnership enquiries, please e-mail info@gomiso.com.
TWEETSHEET YOURSELF!
Vizify's TweetSheet showcases revealing details from your tweetstream, including: top followers, geographic impact, most-retweeted posts, and more.
Taking 2 Minutes to Clean Your Apps Permissions
Try guessing how many apps have permissions to access your private information... Now click the icons and get ready for a surprise!
* Old news is no news: Twitter emphasizes real-time information, so information rapidly gets stale. Followers quickly get bored of even relatively fresh links seen multiple times.
* Contribute to the story: To keep people interested, add an opinion, a pertinent fact or otherwise add to the conversation before hitting "send" on a retweet.
* Keep it short: Twitter limits tweets to 140 characters, but followers still appreciate conciseness. Using as few characters as possible also leaves room for longer, more satisfying comments on retweets.
* Limit Twitter-specific syntax: Overuse of #hashtags, @mentions and abbreviations makes tweets hard to read. But some syntax is helpful; if posing a question, adding a hashtag helps everyone follow along.
* Keep it to yourself: The clichéd "sandwich" tweets about pedestrian, personal details were largely disliked. Reviewers reserved a special hatred for Foursquare location check-ins.
* Provide context: Tweets that are too short leave readers unable to understand their meaning. Simply linking to a blog or photo, without giving readers a reason to click on it, was described as "lame."
* Don't whine: Negative sentiments and complaints were disliked.
* Be a tease: News or professional organizations that want readers to click on their links need to hook the reader, not give away all of the news in the tweet itself.